SOCIAL DILEMMA IN REPEATED INFORMATION CASCADE EXPERIMENTS

When decisions are made sequentially in a group, Bayesian players aiming to maximize individual payoffs often need to ignore their private information and imitate choices of earlier decision makers. This results in information cascades. Once formed, information cascades can be harmful to information...

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Main Authors: Katarzyna Abramczuk, Shenghua Luan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Kozminski University 2011-12-01
Series:Decyzje
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.kozminski.edu.pl/fileadmin/wspolne_elementy/Dokumenty/jednostki/Decyzje/16/Decyzje_nr_16_art._1.pdf
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spelling doaj-9e5b788c391e40c2a296510404e77f532020-11-24T21:07:48ZengKozminski UniversityDecyzje1733-00922011-12-01816528SOCIAL DILEMMA IN REPEATED INFORMATION CASCADE EXPERIMENTSKatarzyna AbramczukShenghua LuanWhen decisions are made sequentially in a group, Bayesian players aiming to maximize individual payoffs often need to ignore their private information and imitate choices of earlier decision makers. This results in information cascades. Once formed, information cascades can be harmful to information aggregation and average payoffs in the group. Therefore, there is a potential dilemma facing players insuch situations. They can reveal private information and risk lower immediate payoffs but benefit the group in the long run, or join an information cascade. It has been shown that reciprocity (i.e., paying a cost at one time while being compensated at another) can lead to optimal solutions in such dilemmas. We hypothesized that it would be so for the present one, as well. This hypothesis was tested in an experiment in which we manipulated two factors: the stability of players' positions in a sequencethat determined whether reciprocity was possible, and the decision payoff structure that constrained to what extent revealing private information was beneficial to the group. The results show that both factors influenced the probabilities of private information revealing and the group payoffs in ways consistent with our predictions.http://www.kozminski.edu.pl/fileadmin/wspolne_elementy/Dokumenty/jednostki/Decyzje/16/Decyzje_nr_16_art._1.pdfinformation cascadescooperationreciprocityBayes Theoremsocial dilemma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Katarzyna Abramczuk
Shenghua Luan
spellingShingle Katarzyna Abramczuk
Shenghua Luan
SOCIAL DILEMMA IN REPEATED INFORMATION CASCADE EXPERIMENTS
Decyzje
information cascades
cooperation
reciprocity
Bayes Theorem
social dilemma
author_facet Katarzyna Abramczuk
Shenghua Luan
author_sort Katarzyna Abramczuk
title SOCIAL DILEMMA IN REPEATED INFORMATION CASCADE EXPERIMENTS
title_short SOCIAL DILEMMA IN REPEATED INFORMATION CASCADE EXPERIMENTS
title_full SOCIAL DILEMMA IN REPEATED INFORMATION CASCADE EXPERIMENTS
title_fullStr SOCIAL DILEMMA IN REPEATED INFORMATION CASCADE EXPERIMENTS
title_full_unstemmed SOCIAL DILEMMA IN REPEATED INFORMATION CASCADE EXPERIMENTS
title_sort social dilemma in repeated information cascade experiments
publisher Kozminski University
series Decyzje
issn 1733-0092
publishDate 2011-12-01
description When decisions are made sequentially in a group, Bayesian players aiming to maximize individual payoffs often need to ignore their private information and imitate choices of earlier decision makers. This results in information cascades. Once formed, information cascades can be harmful to information aggregation and average payoffs in the group. Therefore, there is a potential dilemma facing players insuch situations. They can reveal private information and risk lower immediate payoffs but benefit the group in the long run, or join an information cascade. It has been shown that reciprocity (i.e., paying a cost at one time while being compensated at another) can lead to optimal solutions in such dilemmas. We hypothesized that it would be so for the present one, as well. This hypothesis was tested in an experiment in which we manipulated two factors: the stability of players' positions in a sequencethat determined whether reciprocity was possible, and the decision payoff structure that constrained to what extent revealing private information was beneficial to the group. The results show that both factors influenced the probabilities of private information revealing and the group payoffs in ways consistent with our predictions.
topic information cascades
cooperation
reciprocity
Bayes Theorem
social dilemma
url http://www.kozminski.edu.pl/fileadmin/wspolne_elementy/Dokumenty/jednostki/Decyzje/16/Decyzje_nr_16_art._1.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT katarzynaabramczuk socialdilemmainrepeatedinformationcascadeexperiments
AT shenghualuan socialdilemmainrepeatedinformationcascadeexperiments
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